The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 29, 1931, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC. 29, 1931. By BILLE DE BECK Yo' NO fe MAH GOO'NESS, MISS KITTY, YO SAY YO CAINT MEET MISTAH GOOGLE ? HE'S OVAH DERE WAITIN' FO' W/ — - VES.MISS KITTY, AH'LL TELL HIM WHEN HE GITS HOME! THE SIDEWALK A Classified Ad in the DAILY EMPIRE didit Wonderful what a few words will do when they are aptly put in a classified ad Homes are rented, busi- ness sold, goods exchanged, trips planned and count- less other accomplishments our classified columns. are made possible through Phone 374 FOR RENT — Furnished 6-room house, with piano. 6th St., near Franklin. Inquire 306 Front St Phone 561. FOR RENT—Occidental Annex Din- Room and sleeping rooms. | __ Very suitable for roomers and « boarders. Apply Mrs. Palmer, Oc- cidental Hotel. | FOR RENT—Three rooms, bath and electric range. Corner 3rd and Gold. VILL rent home completely furn- | . ished, cheap, for two months or six months from January 10. John | . H. Dunn. FOR RENT—Five room furnished | * apartment. Inquire 421% East Tth| Street. Phone 2004. FOR RENT — Furnisned 6 room house on Ninth Street near ball park. Telephone 137. SROTIC ROOMS, newly furnished. | + Inquire Arctic Cigar Store. _"‘OR O r'ur‘mshed sleeping room, close in. Phone 537. BEAVIEW APARTMENTS andj cabins, newly finished, complete- ly furnished, also water and lights. Bargain rent. Close in. J#OR RENT—Furnished steam heat- ed rooms, close in. Reasonable rates by the day, week or month. * Arcade Rooms over Bailey's Cafe. e WFOR RENT — Furnished heated | rooms. Inquire William Steinbeck “ Third and Harris. WANTED | WANTED—Housework gnd cook- | ing by hour or day. Phone 589-2. WANTED — Experienced_woman cook wants position. Boarding « house, cafe or family. Address | 1636 care Empire. | PR | YOUNG woman wants work by/ “ hour or day. Phone Room 18} CHff Apts. | e | | "MAGAZINE gift renewals. Tel. 436. MISCELLANEOUS LONESOME—JOIN Ohio’s lnrgesr.: , correspondence club. Members ev-| erywhere. 150 ladies names, ad-| , dresses and descriptions $1.00. (adies 50c). Give age and occu-; . pation with remittance. J. E.| DOonald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. 'PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, | Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun-| ing. Radio and phonograph re- | Ppairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. | | { e . LOSI ANV FGUND LOST — Laays liny, white gold . ,Bulova wrist watch. Finder please, S notify Brice Howard. Reward. | |~ Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. FOR SALE—Otter C Miss Hamilton, Gastineau Hotel NOTICE OF SALE—Oil Screw Ves- sel Pelican, 35 tons gross and 24 tons net, 44 horse power oil en- gine, laid down in Seattle in 1929 will be sold at public auction by U. S. Marshal, at the Govern- ment Float, by the Alaska-Juneau Rock Dump, at 2 o'clock P. M. Monday, January 4th, 1922 FOR SALE — Rooming house for sale, fourteen newly renovated steam heated rooms. Good loca- tion. Reasonable rental. Tele- nhone 442 afternoons or evenings POR \SALE—New e WEDDING RINGS. ENGRAVING FREE. See these at the Nugget Shop. | YYVVVYVVVYVYVVVVVVYVVVVY © @ @ we can give your printing that modern- istic touch so popularin present day advertising AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALAAAAALAL FERRY TIME CARD Leaves Juneau for Douglas and Thane 6:15a.m. 6:15p.m. 7:10a.m. $7:30p.m. 9:15a.m.t 9:40p.m. 12:30p.m.t 11:15p.m. 2:00p.m. 12 midnight 3:20p.m.t $1:00a.m. *4:00p.m. Leaves Douglas for Juneau 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:30a.m. 17:45p.m. 9:30a.m.t 9:55p.m. 12:45p.m.t 11:30p.m. 2:15p.m. 12:15p.m. 3:45p.m.t 1:15a.m. 5:00p.m. *—Thane. t—Freight will be accepted. ${—=Saturdays only. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company IS T Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Open From 8a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Relerence, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL PO S S S SAY, YOU, YOU'VE BLOCKED AND 1T AIN'T GONNA TELL YA AGAIN! GEE! vere COMES THAT DOGGONE COP_AGAIN-—- \E HE SEES ME I'™M SAY! . I ANT IN ANYBODY'S WAY I GOTTA KEEP MY EYE ON THIS CORNER:' HAVE A HEART!! LONG ENOUGH LISSEN, 77 — B\GBOY-- 1 TM WATING FOR ANOUNG 1931, King Features Syndicate, Inc.. Great Britain rights reserved. ‘ GREAT BRITAIN DEMOLISHES R-160 ! P A EVANS HAS 600D CARGO BESIDES 31 PASSENGERS {Vessel Calls at Juneau on Way from Seward to Seattle ¢ Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Nerthwestern scheduled to ar- rive sometime Friday Northland scheduled to ar- rive Friday evening. SUHEDULEDL SAILINGR Norec scheduled to sail from Seattle January 4 at 9 p. m Admiral Evans schedul to sail from Seattle Jan. at 10 a. m. o SOVNG NATLINGS Victoria scheduled southbound about January 3. LOCAL SAILINGS Estcbeth leaves every Saturday night at 8 pm ftor Sike wna Wayports Pacific leaves every Satur- day at 1l am. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports. seeceene s o> | | | 5, | With an unusu: |bound cargo for | year and 31 passengers, the s ship Admiral Evans, Capt. Graham and Pu Byron | bound from Seward to Sea |ed at Juneau late yesterday. |riving shortly after 3 o'clock in |the afterncon and departing at 8 ;at night. She came here by way |of Sitka. | For discharge at Puget Sound, |the vessel had a quantity of ore, which was from a mine in the - e — 1 HALIBUT MEN AT Seward district, and about 20,000 PRINGE RUPERT' cases of canned salmon, besides, considerable cured herring ‘sPLIT UN UNIUNS Origin Of Fish Cargo A few thcusan dcases of the sa [mon and all the herring were taken | |aboard at Crab Bay near Latouche | ?‘r‘);lrot.lu; X((:st::?,::mrx&r:: \\1(1!:1: 'Fishermen Faii to Agreef will be sold as souvenirs. [at. Bxeursion Imet. Ore comcen-| and Vessel Owners |vessel owners' Association in re-|posal from Seattle that “the hali- |trates of the Alaska Juneau G\)kli Are Neutral gard to such an affiliation.” but closed season be made from | Mining Company were received at | The following resolution was ad- | November 1 to January 15 with this city for transportation south.| opted each boat taking an additional While here the Evans put off e “Demanding that the minister & month off in June, July or Aug- coal that she had loaded ay Seattle atpii. |Of fisheries take action following |ust.” and that she had carried for bal his statement on the floor of the last both ways across the Gulf of ® Canadian House of Commons last | TERRITORIAL Alaska. summer that a round table con- CE S Passengers for Juneau ence would be held with a view Of the vessel's 31 passengers 16 having the two-cent duty on disembarked at this port. They wadian fish entering the Unitad wer States removed.” sindl ss Clara Ben- B o . B Uih, Tohart 1. | fUOn. 0 wdy decided by a “two-| At a meting held by the Ca- rich, H. Dugdell, E. M. Axobon.‘(mrd flproxxm:alc vote"” u_) Jjoin lhe}nadmn Halibut Vessel Owners' as- Charles Edwards, George Caves, Norn.hcrn British Columbia F‘lsher-;»o:mod, pn?smcd over by Dan J. Beach, Lee Williams, John Bo- men's Association. ’ | Larsen, president, “the assiciation |censes to be secured from City b Rir“.‘ward Euphranie, and two | Action of Anuthe:r Meeting decldovdv to take no_sides S0 fm'l('l(-rk, Juneau. SiaiAoinas, i At another meeting, presided as affiliation of the fishermen wi\hi Deputy United States Marshals R o over by George Anderson at theeither the Deep Sea Fishermen's |will enforce collection. Penalty is Westward ports for port Dr‘(’_p Sea Fishermen's Hall, “of union or Northern British Columbia |$100.00 provldrd for failure to com- iy ‘mm»u fishermen to th‘:‘ number | Fishermen’s a ation is concern- i"ly' Licenses are now obtainable. Mrs. M. Wakefield, Mrs. George of about 100, it was decided by n;cd. Rather the a: iation is ready | H. R. SHEPARD, Inman, Mrs. M. F ine, Mrs. | two-thirds vote to stay with the|to recognize any union of fisher- —adv. City Clerk. Bt Bk Beodn Beie Po T Cha mnars LRSS Ik : ] gy o o official organization of the past| The Canadian Halibut Vessel Ow- Quartz and placer locallcn no- jamin Cecil, John Ohman, J. H. . 3 3 | o i 4 |many years. |ners’ association endorsed a pro- |tices at The Empire. e 4 3 O : " " 1 Joslin, Peter Thibault, Andrew i ke ook M B W ; sevecvveece 000000 Associated Press Photo | Great Britain is demolishing her famous dirigible R-100 to save the ! expense involved in upkeep. Here the work is shown in progress at | Cardington air station. Soon the only recognizable remains of the air. | ship program begun in 1524 will be furnishings from the ship which PRINCE RUPERT, B. C.—Hali but fishermen in Prince |disagree as to their union ations and halibut vessel jare not inclined to take /in the disagreement, accor ithe Prince Rupert News. | At one meeting of halibut fisher- men, presided over by Gusta Norman, president of the Northern | ———e RENEWABLE JANUARY 1 ter 83, Session Laws of 1931, provides: Automobiles . or trucks carrying passengers for hire, $15.00 per annum. On all other auto- mobiles, trucks, delivery cars and motorcycles, $10.00 per annum. Li- AUTOMOBILE LI- son, C. H. Nubberhorst, J. M. Blinn, H. F. Johnson, G. M. Chambers and one third class. Passengers who bought here for the south were: For Petersburg—Mr. and Mrs Ray Southard. Thomas Scott and Elmer Swanson. For Keichikan—Mrs. Bebe Shay, H. V. Williams, H. C. Miller, G Hale, George B. Grigsby. For Seattle— and Mrs. George Boylan, Mrs. E. Erick:on‘ Miss Winnifred Carlson, Miss C.| 2 3 3 “By uniting, however, it Hanson, H. W. Terhune, nd C"Ie![ ket thare. SN MO Hansen, Alfred Barnstad, L. Elling- | e b e Williams, R. J. | benefits in many directions. | Sommers, | 1 “It was also decided to ascertain i uel Sokoloff, Samuel Poloauin. |\ "oy of the Canadian Halibut | Grigsby. = - TIDES TOMORRCW ferred to, the Prince Rupert News| says further: { “The proposal is that a hali-| but branch of the Northern Brit-| ish Columbia Fishermen’s Asso-| ciation be formed, this branch to have its own autonomy and the power to dictate its own affairs In the event of the salmon fish- ermen’s branch having trou lof any kind, the halibut branch would not necessarily be involved. Mutual Benefits tickets | VERY NEW Smart Lounging Pajamas FOR LEISURE HOURS FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Wharf. Front, near Saw Mill. Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Grocery. Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s Garage. Front and Seward. Front and Main. Second and Main. Fifth and Seward. Seventh and Main. Fire Hall. Home Boarding House. Gastineau and Rawn Way. Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. Fifth and Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. Calhoun, Apts. Distin and Indian. Ninth and Calhoun. Tenth and C. +Twelfth, BP.R. garage. ‘Twelfth and Willoughby. Home Grocery. Seater Tract. Many New Patterns—All Sizes Crepe de Chine Gowns ., 15.4 feet , 41 feet ., 147 feet 1.1 feet ALAMEDA BELIEV TO BE TOTAL LOSS; REPAIR BILLS HIGH SEATTLE, Dec. 29. — Alaska steamer Alameda, which was swept by fire on November 28, is ex- pected to be declared a total loss. This is the result of repairing bids, of which four have been opened, and found to be above the insured value of $500,000. —ee———— SPECIAL FERRY A special ferry for the Rebekahs and Odd Fellows will leave Juneau at 7:30 Wednesday night to attend the Ohristmas tree in Douglas. High tide, Low tide, 11:00 2 High tide, 4:47 p. Low tide, 11:18 p. Dainty Dance Sets HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP Shhddh modabdba Gn opp. Seaview Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska WECAN GIVE YOU what you want IN PRINTING when you want it! Trynlmwflyo--lhb Established 1898 DRB R R REWEOON ~ORPAnNE B FINEST ST/\EAMERS Yall RAILING SCHEDULE SPECIAL REDUCED FARES: JUNEAU TO SEATTLE AND RETURN Upper Deck $73.50 Saloon Deck $65.50 Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer— Northbound = Southbound VICTORIA N'WESTERN Dec. 20 Dec. 29 Dec. 23 Jan. 1 Jan. 2 Jan. PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- b Juneau, Haines (Chilkoot Barracks), Skag- Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. All sailings subject to change without notice INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 Steamship Co. Alaska Leave Arrive Southtound Beattle Juneau Lv.Junean Adm. Evans.Dec.15 Dec,18 Dec.28 Adm. Evans .Jan. 5 Jan. 8 Jan.18 Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Sitka, *Yakutat, Cordova, Seward, Seldovia, Kodiak. Intormation ana tickets furnisb, on Seattle-Casfornia service. California-New York vis Panam Canal and return, Round the world, Trans-Atlantie Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wai- er, return by rail), 8350.00 ADM |¥' LINE Northland Transportation Company SERVING ALASKANS WINTER OR SUMMER—Same Service—Same Rates Bailing from Seattle every Monday NI 9:00 P.M. for Ketchikan, Wnn‘e’fl, lP‘:un-‘ = burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Beattle Juneau Lv.Juneau Dec. 19 Dec. 24 Dec. 24 N : Dec. 28 Jan. 1 Jan. 1 Schedule subject to change without notice J.B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER Ticket Agent Freight Agent Phone 79 Phone 114 | MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY SATURDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION GOMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Saturday at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and Way Points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule. Passen- gers must obtain tickets from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau M. S. “ZAPORA” Dec. 16 Dec. 24 Beginning Jan. 1, Zapora will sail from Seattle 1st and 16th every month, arriving at Juneau 9th and 24th. WILLIS NAVIGATION CO. Round Trip, $50.00 One Way, $28.00 Pacifie Coast: Coal ‘€0. PHONE 412

Other pages from this issue: